| PCI EXPRESS GUIDELINES | 
 | ====================== | 
 |  | 
 | 1. Introduction | 
 | ================ | 
 | The doc proposes best practices on how to use PCI Express (PCIe) / PCI | 
 | devices in PCI Express based machines and explains the reasoning behind | 
 | them. | 
 |  | 
 | Note that the PCIe features are available only when using the 'q35' | 
 | machine type on x86 architecture and the 'virt' machine type on AArch64. | 
 | Other machine types do not use PCIe at this time. | 
 |  | 
 | The following presentations accompany this document: | 
 |  (1) Q35 overview. | 
 |      https://wiki.qemu.org/images/4/4e/Q35.pdf | 
 |  (2) A comparison between PCI and PCI Express technologies. | 
 |      https://wiki.qemu.org/images/f/f6/PCIvsPCIe.pdf | 
 |  | 
 | Note: The usage examples are not intended to replace the full | 
 | documentation, please use QEMU help to retrieve all options. | 
 |  | 
 | 2. Device placement strategy | 
 | ============================ | 
 | QEMU does not have a clear socket-device matching mechanism | 
 | and allows any PCI/PCI Express device to be plugged into any | 
 | PCI/PCI Express slot. | 
 | Plugging a PCI device into a PCI Express slot might not always work and | 
 | is weird anyway since it cannot be done for "bare metal". | 
 | Plugging a PCI Express device into a PCI slot will hide the Extended | 
 | Configuration Space thus is also not recommended. | 
 |  | 
 | The recommendation is to separate the PCI Express and PCI hierarchies. | 
 | PCI Express devices should be plugged only into PCI Express Root Ports and | 
 | PCI Express Downstream ports. | 
 |  | 
 | 2.1 Root Bus (pcie.0) | 
 | ===================== | 
 | Place only the following kinds of devices directly on the Root Complex: | 
 |     (1) PCI Devices (e.g. network card, graphics card, IDE controller), | 
 |         not controllers. Place only legacy PCI devices on | 
 |         the Root Complex. These will be considered Integrated Endpoints. | 
 |         Note: Integrated Endpoints are not hot-pluggable. | 
 |  | 
 |         Although the PCI Express spec does not forbid PCI Express devices as | 
 |         Integrated Endpoints, existing hardware mostly integrates legacy PCI | 
 |         devices with the Root Complex. Guest OSes are suspected to behave | 
 |         strangely when PCI Express devices are integrated | 
 |         with the Root Complex. | 
 |  | 
 |     (2) PCI Express Root Ports (pcie-root-port), for starting exclusively | 
 |         PCI Express hierarchies. | 
 |  | 
 |     (3) PCI Express to PCI Bridge (pcie-pci-bridge), for starting legacy PCI | 
 |         hierarchies. | 
 |  | 
 |     (4) Extra Root Complexes (pxb-pcie), if multiple PCI Express Root Buses | 
 |         are needed. | 
 |  | 
 |    pcie.0 bus | 
 |    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 |         |                |                    |                  | | 
 |    -----------   ------------------   -------------------   -------------- | 
 |    | PCI Dev |   | PCIe Root Port |   | PCIe-PCI Bridge |   |  pxb-pcie  | | 
 |    -----------   ------------------   -------------------   -------------- | 
 |  | 
 | 2.1.1 To plug a device into pcie.0 as a Root Complex Integrated Endpoint use: | 
 |           -device <dev>[,bus=pcie.0] | 
 | 2.1.2 To expose a new PCI Express Root Bus use: | 
 |           -device pxb-pcie,id=pcie.1,bus_nr=x[,numa_node=y][,addr=z] | 
 |       PCI Express Root Ports and PCI Express to PCI bridges can be | 
 |       connected to the pcie.1 bus: | 
 |           -device pcie-root-port,id=root_port1[,bus=pcie.1][,chassis=x][,slot=y][,addr=z] \ | 
 |           -device pcie-pci-bridge,id=pcie_pci_bridge1,bus=pcie.1 | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 2.2 PCI Express only hierarchy | 
 | ============================== | 
 | Always use PCI Express Root Ports to start PCI Express hierarchies. | 
 |  | 
 | A PCI Express Root bus supports up to 32 devices. Since each | 
 | PCI Express Root Port is a function and a multi-function | 
 | device may support up to 8 functions, the maximum possible | 
 | number of PCI Express Root Ports per PCI Express Root Bus is 256. | 
 |  | 
 | Prefer grouping PCI Express Root Ports into multi-function devices | 
 | to keep a simple flat hierarchy that is enough for most scenarios. | 
 | Only use PCI Express Switches (x3130-upstream, xio3130-downstream) | 
 | if there is no more room for PCI Express Root Ports. | 
 | Please see section 4. for further justifications. | 
 |  | 
 | Plug only PCI Express devices into PCI Express Ports. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |    pcie.0 bus | 
 |    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 |         |                 |                                    | | 
 |    -------------    -------------                        ------------- | 
 |    | Root Port |    | Root Port |                        | Root Port | | 
 |    ------------     -------------                        ------------- | 
 |          |                            -------------------------|------------------------ | 
 |     ------------                      |                 -----------------              | | 
 |     | PCIe Dev |                      |    PCI Express  | Upstream Port |              | | 
 |     ------------                      |      Switch     -----------------              | | 
 |                                       |                  |            |                | | 
 |                                       |    -------------------    -------------------  | | 
 |                                       |    | Downstream Port |    | Downstream Port |  | | 
 |                                       |    -------------------    -------------------  | | 
 |                                       -------------|-----------------------|------------ | 
 |                                              ------------ | 
 |                                              | PCIe Dev | | 
 |                                              ------------ | 
 |  | 
 | 2.2.1 Plugging a PCI Express device into a PCI Express Root Port: | 
 |           -device pcie-root-port,id=root_port1,chassis=x,slot=y[,bus=pcie.0][,addr=z]  \ | 
 |           -device <dev>,bus=root_port1 | 
 | 2.2.2 Using multi-function PCI Express Root Ports: | 
 |       -device pcie-root-port,id=root_port1,multifunction=on,chassis=x,addr=z.0[,slot=y][,bus=pcie.0] \ | 
 |       -device pcie-root-port,id=root_port2,chassis=x1,addr=z.1[,slot=y1][,bus=pcie.0] \ | 
 |       -device pcie-root-port,id=root_port3,chassis=x2,addr=z.2[,slot=y2][,bus=pcie.0] \ | 
 | 2.2.3 Plugging a PCI Express device into a Switch: | 
 |       -device pcie-root-port,id=root_port1,chassis=x,slot=y[,bus=pcie.0][,addr=z]  \ | 
 |       -device x3130-upstream,id=upstream_port1,bus=root_port1[,addr=x]          \ | 
 |       -device xio3130-downstream,id=downstream_port1,bus=upstream_port1,chassis=x1,slot=y1[,addr=z1]] \ | 
 |       -device <dev>,bus=downstream_port1 | 
 |  | 
 | Notes: | 
 |   - (slot, chassis) pair is mandatory and must be unique for each | 
 |     PCI Express Root Port. slot defaults to 0 when not specified. | 
 |   - 'addr' parameter can be 0 for all the examples above. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 2.3 PCI only hierarchy | 
 | ====================== | 
 | Legacy PCI devices can be plugged into pcie.0 as Integrated Endpoints, | 
 | but, as mentioned in section 5, doing so means the legacy PCI | 
 | device in question will be incapable of hot-unplugging. | 
 | Besides that use PCI Express to PCI Bridges (pcie-pci-bridge) in | 
 | combination with PCI-PCI Bridges (pci-bridge) to start PCI hierarchies. | 
 |  | 
 | Prefer flat hierarchies. For most scenarios a single PCI Express to PCI Bridge | 
 | (having 32 slots) and several PCI-PCI Bridges attached to it | 
 | (each supporting also 32 slots) will support hundreds of legacy devices. | 
 | The recommendation is to populate one PCI-PCI Bridge under the | 
 | PCI Express to PCI Bridge until is full and then plug a new PCI-PCI Bridge... | 
 |  | 
 |    pcie.0 bus | 
 |    ---------------------------------------------- | 
 |         |                            | | 
 |    -----------               ------------------- | 
 |    | PCI Dev |               | PCIe-PCI Bridge | | 
 |    -----------               ------------------- | 
 |                                |            | | 
 |                   ------------------    ------------------ | 
 |                   | PCI-PCI Bridge |    | PCI-PCI Bridge | | 
 |                   ------------------    ------------------ | 
 |                                          |           | | 
 |                                   -----------     ----------- | 
 |                                   | PCI Dev |     | PCI Dev | | 
 |                                   -----------     ----------- | 
 |  | 
 | 2.3.1 To plug a PCI device into pcie.0 as an Integrated Endpoint use: | 
 |       -device <dev>[,bus=pcie.0] | 
 | 2.3.2 Plugging a PCI device into a PCI-PCI Bridge: | 
 |       -device pcie-pci-bridge,id=pcie_pci_bridge1[,bus=pcie.0] \ | 
 |       -device pci-bridge,id=pci_bridge1,bus=pcie_pci_bridge1[,chassis_nr=x][,addr=y] \ | 
 |       -device <dev>,bus=pci_bridge1[,addr=x] | 
 |       Note that 'addr' cannot be 0 unless shpc=off parameter is passed to | 
 |       the PCI Bridge/PCI Express to PCI Bridge. | 
 |  | 
 | 3. IO space issues | 
 | =================== | 
 | The PCI Express Root Ports and PCI Express Downstream ports are seen by | 
 | Firmware/Guest OS as PCI-PCI Bridges. As required by the PCI spec, each | 
 | such Port should be reserved a 4K IO range for, even though only one | 
 | (multifunction) device can be plugged into each Port. This results in | 
 | poor IO space utilization. | 
 |  | 
 | The firmware used by QEMU (SeaBIOS/OVMF) may try further optimizations | 
 | by not allocating IO space for each PCI Express Root / PCI Express | 
 | Downstream port if: | 
 |     (1) the port is empty, or | 
 |     (2) the device behind the port has no IO BARs. | 
 |  | 
 | The IO space is very limited, to 65536 byte-wide IO ports, and may even be | 
 | fragmented by fixed IO ports owned by platform devices resulting in at most | 
 | 10 PCI Express Root Ports or PCI Express Downstream Ports per system | 
 | if devices with IO BARs are used in the PCI Express hierarchy. Using the | 
 | proposed device placing strategy solves this issue by using only | 
 | PCI Express devices within PCI Express hierarchy. | 
 |  | 
 | The PCI Express spec requires that PCI Express devices work properly | 
 | without using IO ports. The PCI hierarchy has no such limitations. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 4. Bus numbers issues | 
 | ====================== | 
 | Each PCI domain can have up to only 256 buses and the QEMU PCI Express | 
 | machines do not support multiple PCI domains even if extra Root | 
 | Complexes (pxb-pcie) are used. | 
 |  | 
 | Each element of the PCI Express hierarchy (Root Complexes, | 
 | PCI Express Root Ports, PCI Express Downstream/Upstream ports) | 
 | uses one bus number. Since only one (multifunction) device | 
 | can be attached to a PCI Express Root Port or PCI Express Downstream | 
 | Port it is advised to plan in advance for the expected number of | 
 | devices to prevent bus number starvation. | 
 |  | 
 | Avoiding PCI Express Switches (and thereby striving for a 'flatter' PCI | 
 | Express hierarchy) enables the hierarchy to not spend bus numbers on | 
 | Upstream Ports. | 
 |  | 
 | The bus_nr properties of the pxb-pcie devices partition the 0..255 bus | 
 | number space. All bus numbers assigned to the buses recursively behind a | 
 | given pxb-pcie device's root bus must fit between the bus_nr property of | 
 | that pxb-pcie device, and the lowest of the higher bus_nr properties | 
 | that the command line sets for other pxb-pcie devices. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 5. Hot-plug | 
 | ============ | 
 | The PCI Express root buses (pcie.0 and the buses exposed by pxb-pcie devices) | 
 | do not support hot-plug, so any devices plugged into Root Complexes | 
 | cannot be hot-plugged/hot-unplugged: | 
 |     (1) PCI Express Integrated Endpoints | 
 |     (2) PCI Express Root Ports | 
 |     (3) PCI Express to PCI Bridges | 
 |     (4) pxb-pcie | 
 |  | 
 | Be aware that PCI Express Downstream Ports can't be hot-plugged into | 
 | an existing PCI Express Upstream Port. | 
 |  | 
 | PCI devices can be hot-plugged into PCI Express to PCI and PCI-PCI Bridges. | 
 | The PCI hot-plug into PCI-PCI bridge is ACPI based, whereas hot-plug into | 
 | PCI Express to PCI bridges is SHPC-based. They both can work side by side with | 
 | the PCI Express native hot-plug. | 
 |  | 
 | PCI Express devices can be natively hot-plugged/hot-unplugged into/from | 
 | PCI Express Root Ports (and PCI Express Downstream Ports). | 
 |  | 
 | 5.1 Planning for hot-plug: | 
 |     (1) PCI hierarchy | 
 |         Leave enough PCI-PCI Bridge slots empty or add one | 
 |         or more empty PCI-PCI Bridges to the PCI Express to PCI Bridge. | 
 |  | 
 |         For each such PCI-PCI Bridge the Guest Firmware is expected to reserve | 
 |         4K IO space and 2M MMIO range to be used for all devices behind it. | 
 |         Appropriate PCI capability is designed, see pcie_pci_bridge.txt. | 
 |  | 
 |         Because of the hard IO limit of around 10 PCI Bridges (~ 40K space) | 
 |         per system don't use more than 9 PCI-PCI Bridges, leaving 4K for the | 
 |         Integrated Endpoints. (The PCI Express Hierarchy needs no IO space). | 
 |  | 
 |     (2) PCI Express hierarchy: | 
 |         Leave enough PCI Express Root Ports empty. Use multifunction | 
 |         PCI Express Root Ports (up to 8 ports per pcie.0 slot) | 
 |         on the Root Complex(es), for keeping the | 
 |         hierarchy as flat as possible, thereby saving PCI bus numbers. | 
 |         Don't use PCI Express Switches if you don't have | 
 |         to, each one of those uses an extra PCI bus (for its Upstream Port) | 
 |         that could be put to better use with another Root Port or Downstream | 
 |         Port, which may come handy for hot-plugging another device. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 5.3 Hot-plug example: | 
 | Using HMP: (add -monitor stdio to QEMU command line) | 
 |   device_add <dev>,id=<id>,bus=<PCI Express Root Port Id/PCI Express Downstream Port Id/PCI-PCI Bridge Id/> | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 6. Device assignment | 
 | ==================== | 
 | Host devices are mostly PCI Express and should be plugged only into | 
 | PCI Express Root Ports or PCI Express Downstream Ports. | 
 | PCI-PCI Bridge slots can be used for legacy PCI host devices. | 
 |  | 
 | 6.1 How to detect if a device is PCI Express: | 
 |   > lspci -s 03:00.0 -v (as root) | 
 |  | 
 |     03:00.0 Network controller: Intel Corporation Wireless 7260 (rev 83) | 
 |     Subsystem: Intel Corporation Dual Band Wireless-AC 7260 | 
 |     Flags: bus master, fast devsel, latency 0, IRQ 50 | 
 |     Memory at f0400000 (64-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=8K] | 
 |     Capabilities: [c8] Power Management version 3 | 
 |     Capabilities: [d0] MSI: Enable+ Count=1/1 Maskable- 64bit+ | 
 |     Capabilities: [40] Express Endpoint, MSI 00 | 
 |     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | 
 |     Capabilities: [100] Advanced Error Reporting | 
 |     Capabilities: [140] Device Serial Number 7c-7a-91-ff-ff-90-db-20 | 
 |     Capabilities: [14c] Latency Tolerance Reporting | 
 |     Capabilities: [154] Vendor Specific Information: ID=cafe Rev=1 Len=014  | 
 |  | 
 | If you can see the "Express Endpoint" capability in the | 
 | output, then the device is indeed PCI Express. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 7. Virtio devices | 
 | ================= | 
 | Virtio devices plugged into the PCI hierarchy or as Integrated Endpoints | 
 | will remain PCI and have transitional behaviour as default. | 
 | Transitional virtio devices work in both IO and MMIO modes depending on | 
 | the guest support. The Guest firmware will assign both IO and MMIO resources | 
 | to transitional virtio devices. | 
 |  | 
 | Virtio devices plugged into PCI Express ports are PCI Express devices and | 
 | have "1.0" behavior by default without IO support. | 
 | In both cases disable-legacy and disable-modern properties can be used | 
 | to override the behaviour. | 
 |  | 
 | Note that setting disable-legacy=off will enable legacy mode (enabling | 
 | legacy behavior) for PCI Express virtio devices causing them to | 
 | require IO space, which, given the limited available IO space, may quickly | 
 | lead to resource exhaustion, and is therefore strongly discouraged. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 8. Conclusion | 
 | ============== | 
 | The proposal offers a usage model that is easy to understand and follow | 
 | and at the same time overcomes the PCI Express architecture limitations. |